I don’t think I can say much about this book that hasn’t already been said (see a small sampling below), and I read it several years ago, so the details aren’t clear. But the chilling feeling the book gave me was. The Handmaid’s Tale, like 1984, is set in a frightening version of the future, in a society totally constricted by government -and religious- control. Some catastrophe has caused fewer and fewer children to be born, until women are pretty much only valued for their childbearing ability- and used as objects to that purpose. They have no rights. Their manner of dress, who they speak to, where they go- all is restricted. The protagonist, Offred, is one of the “handmaids” kept to bear children- and as she slowly unfolds her story, we learn more and more exactly what that role entails. Probably one of the most depressing things about the story is that Offred can remember what life was like before- she used to have a family, a job, live in a society we could recognize. Comparing her current situation to how she remembers life used to be, Offred observes how quickly everyone’s perceptions – even her own- have changed to fall in line with the prevailing brainwashing. She tries to find little ways to keep her spirits up and assert her personality without bringing undue attention to herself -that would be dangerous- but it’s a stark life, a depressing existence, with no happy ending.
The only other book I’ve read by Atwood, Cat’s Eye, didn’t really touch me strongly, but Handmaid’s Tale is a compelling, horrifyingly fascinating book. I really ought to try more by this author.